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Youth: 23

1) Children of September 11th (in affiliation with Families of Sept. 11) 2) Tuesday’s Children

3) The Committee for Hispanic Children and Families NY (mental health services)

a. ”to improve the quality of life for Latino Children and families b.  received grant money to help support the latino population

affected by 9/11

 projectrenewal-tidescenter.org

Youth in following schools: PS 1, PS 2, PS 3, PS 20, PS, 41, PS 42, PS 89, PS 110, PS 124, PS/IS

126, PS 130, IS 131, PS 134, PS 137, PS 142, PS 150, PS 184, MS 289, Greenwich Village Middle

5) Saint Vincent’s Catholic Medical Center of NY

 Child & Adolescence Program www.svcmcny.org

6) The Resiliency Program

Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York

National Center for Disaster Preparedness www.ncdp.mailman.columbia.edu

7) University Settlement Society of New York

 youth 6-14 who resides in lower Manhattan 8) Pathways 9/11 Recovery Program

 YES community counseling center southeastern Nassau County

9) Open Hearts

Partnership with Children, Inc.'s mission is to strengthen the emotional, social and cognitive skills of at-risk children so that they can succeed in school, in society, and in life  crisis intervention and individual counseling, small group work, and whole classroom interventions.

10) New York Presbyterian Hospital

 children’s mental health

11) New Visions for Public Schools – 9/11 School Recovery Program

12) Mental Health Screening & Referral of Two Child Populations Exposed to 9/11

 Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene Child Psychiatry Epidemiology Group

13) Manhattan Youth Recreation and Resources

 k-12 Manhattan kids 14) Life Matters

 Fujianese youth residing in Chinatown

15) Kids Connection: FDNY Counseling services unit

16) Good Grief Program/Circle Boston Medical Center

For more than 20 years, the Good Grief Program has offered clinical, training and consultative services to families, educators and health providers and communities to help adults help children facing life’s speed bumps.

 Based on the premise that with crisis comes an opportunity to develop, strengthen and master coping skills, our mission is to train adult professionals, support families and scaffold children so that they may become resilient in the face of loss. We can help in a number of ways.

17) Adventures in Teaching and Counseling American Group Psychotherapy Association

 group and child therapy

18) Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City

 offered more support for kids affected by 9/11 19) Creative Alternatives of New York (CANY)

 Through the use of drama therapy and creative expression in a therapeutic group setting, CANY helps children and adults expand their self concept, imagine new life possibilities and build the social and emotional tools they need in order to live meaningful lives.

20) Creative Arts Team

 Research Foundation of the City University of New York

 Youth in New York City School Districts 1, 6, 8 and 27

 counseling through arts 21) Families Forward Program

 NYU Child Study Center

 research done on mental health

 resources for mental health 22) Feel the Music

 music and healing

“arts”

23) Grand Street Settlement Family Support Services

 ps 15 students; community services Community Resources and Support: 22

 offer education programs, counseling, job training 1) Chinatown Resource Center (NY) community center

 Helped with case management for people in the Chinatown district

The Chinatown Resource Center works to empower the community and promote community stability by offering case management, referral services and public education programs

 been around since 1898 helping immigrants settle in and not be taken advantage of not understanding American ways  received money from the grant to help people in Manhattens lower east side (doesn’t focus on 9/11)

2) Jewish Family and Vocational Service of Middlesex County (NJ)

 jewish community center that raised money for families in the area

 still exists but doesn’t offer specific relief to 9/11 victims anymore

3) The Committee for Hispanic Children and Families NY (mental health services)

”to improve the quality of life for Latino Children and families

 received grant money to help support the latino population affected by 9/11 4) Federation employment and guidance service inc NY (community assistance) Health and social services

Doesn’t center on support for 9/11 victims anymore but still in existence

“To help each individual achieve greater success, independence and dignity – at work, at school, at home, and in the community – by providing a diverse network of cost-effective health and human services, which meet the changing needs of the Jewish and broader communities, business and our society.” MISSION

5) Filipino American Human Services (NY)

FAHSI is a community-based, non-profit organization dedicated to improving the social conditions and enhancing the self-reliance of the Filipino and Filipino American communities of New York City.

 received grant money to help Filipino Americans affected by 9/11 in NYC 6) Korean Community Services of Metropolitan (NY) (offered JOBS)

 KCS' objectives are to develop and deliver a broad range of community services to meet the various needs of the community. To achieve these objectives, KCS provides various professional community services within the areas of community, aging, and public health

 Helped the Korean community with the grant money 7) Latin American Workers Project (NY)??

 Spanish website, helps latin Americans find jobs since 1997

 advocacy and case management to latin amaericans 8) Saint Mark’s Place Institute For Mental Health

St. Mark's Place Institute for Mental Health, Inc. (d.b.a. Unitas) was established to fulfill the existing gap in delivering health care services in psychiatry and chemical dependence for Polish and other Eastern European Slavic populations in New York.

 Mental health programs to help community members, families, youth, workers after 9/11 that needed support and have eastern European ancestry

9) World Trade Center Family Center (NY) South Nassau Communities Hospital (MENTAL HEALTH)

Free support groups for those affected by Bereavement, Breast Cancer, Chronic Pain, Long-Term Loss, Divorced & Separated Marriages, Family Mental Illness and Irritable Bowel Syndrome, and more. World Trade Center Family Center Established in the aftermath of the 9/11 tragedy, this free bereavement and counseling program for adults, children and adolescents who lost family members as a result of the 9/11 terrorist attacks is based in Rockville Centre. Home Ground Program

“Communities Hospital to have provided a "safe harbor" to you and your families for the past seven years. Together we have learned about the value of community during the process of healing. Hope, indeed, does "love company". Thank you for placing your trust in us as we navigated through a very challenging period in our nation's history. We are very proud of the efforts of our World Trade Center Family Center staff in designing innovative counseling and prevention programs which have helped support your recovery and resiliency.”

On June 30th, 2008, our grant funding through the American Red Cross ended. We are pleased that most families benefited from the prevention services that we provided through the program. We believe that a transition in the type of

programming offered by South Nassau is appropriate at this time. Our World Trade Center Family Center staff has worked with you to provide valuable linkages and referrals to specialized 9/11 prevention and advocacy programs. In addition, South Nassau Communities Hospital will continue to be available to address any mental health or medical needs you or your family may have. Please contact the following members of our Hospital's leadership if we can be of any assistance now or in the future.

http://www.southnassau.org/services/911Forward.cfm 10) Health & Welfare Council of Long Island (NY)

- HWCLI serves the interests of poor and vulnerable people on Long Island by convening, representing, and supporting the non-profit agencies that serve them

 offers education programs, job training ext

11) New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health (NYCOSH) ***ALSO IN INFO/REFERRAL

 NYCOSH is a membership organization of workers, unions, community-based organizations, health and legal professionals, and other activists. The mission of NYCOSH is to extend and defend every person’s human right to a safe and healthful work environment.

12) Family Support Center (Brooklyn Hospital) DOUBLE CODED - offered programs and services for jobs/counceling

- Lutheran HealthCare is a Social Ministry of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

13) “September Space” World Cares Center

As a registered 501c3 charitable organization, World Cares Center’s mission is to alleviate the pain and suffering inherent in accidents and disasters by empowering individuals, strengthening communities, and training local citizens, agencies, and leaders to prevent, prepare for, and respond to emergency situations

14) Tuesday’s Children

 Offers mental health services, career skills, volunteering, family support Tuesday's Children serves all those directly impacted by the events of September 11, 2001—children, families, 9/11 responders—through life-changing programs and services.

15) Voices of September 11th

Still running today (helps my family)

 VOICES of September 11th provides information, support services and annual commemorative events for 9/11 families, rescue workers and survivors;

commemorates the lives and stories of September 11th; promotes public policy reform on prevention, preparedness and response to terrorism, building bridges between international communities changed by terrorism.

16) World Trade Center United Family Group

 create education programs for schools to use

 The September 11th Education Trust

WTC United peer support programs promote healing by uniting affected individuals through shared experience. Healing after tragedy is a life long process, one in which victims adopt a new life.

17) Charles B. Wang Community Health Center

 Asian American social efforts

Be a leader in providing quality, culturally relevant, and affordable health care and education, and advocate on behalf of the health and social needs of underserved Asian Americans.

 In response to the September 11 tragedy, the health center established the Chinatown Health Partnership. Supported by the September 11 Fund and the New York Community Trust, the partnership offered low cost health care services to individuals affected by the tragedy.

18) Institute for the Puerto Rican Hispanic Elderly

The Institute mission is to affirm, protect, and empower the minority elderly and their families by ensuring that their human needs are met under the law. A primary concern is the access, acquisition, and protection of senior rights and entitlements.

19) Mental Health Association of Westchester County

 family, group, youth

20) North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center

 counseling center for children family and communities 21) StoryCorps - World Trade Center

 organization that helped memorialize the victims through personal animated shorts or stories

 it’s a way for families to get their stories out and share them with the world 22) United Activities Unlimited

United Activities Unlimited, Inc. is a Staten Island community-based agency that provides educational, recreational, counseling and social programs for children and young adults.

School programs Family of Victims: 6

1) http://www.massfund.org/ Massachusetts 9/11 Fund

The Massachusetts 9/11 Fund is a non-profit corporation devoted to supporting families with ties to Massachusetts who lost loved ones in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and ensuring that those lost on 9/11 are not forgotten. Our mission is to commemorate, educate and remember

2) Families’ GOALS Project

 Catholic Family & Community Services (catholic charities) 3) “The Living Room” Jewish Family Service of Bergen County

 The mission of JFS is to strengthen and preserve the well – being of individuals and families; to help them effectively mee the challenges and chages through life by providing quality human services and professional counseling to all who call upon its services

 NOT ACTIVE

4) FDNY/Columbia University Family Guidance Program

“Trustees of Columbia University”

 counseling for fire department families

5) FDNY Counseling Services Unit 6) StoryCorps - World Trade Center

 organization that helped memorialize the victims through personal animated

 it’s a way for families to get their stories out and share them with the world Relief workers/volunteers: 9

1) World Trade Center Medical Monitoring Program in New Jersey ****

 offered health screening and treatment for fireman and other effected by 9/11 From September 11, 2001, through fiscal year 2010, approximately $475 million in federal funds was made available for screening, monitoring, and treating WTC responders for illnesses and conditions related to the WTC disaster. These include asthma, persistent coughing, and other respiratory conditions and mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

The three federal programs that provided screening, monitoring, and treatment services to responders prior to July 1, 2011, which we refer to here as the WTC responder health programs, were the New York City Fire Department's (FDNY) WTC Medical Monitoring and Treatment Program

2) FDNY World Trade Center Treatment Program

 treatment and screening for firefighters involved with 9/11 rescues

3) Queens College – Research Foundation for CUNY (shut down but joined with WTCHP)

 On July 1, 2011, the World Trade Center Medical Monitoring and Treatment Program (WTCMMTP) became part of the World Trade Center Health

Program created per the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act. The World Trade Center Health Program is now a federal program administered by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

SAME THING ^

4) World Trade Center Health Effects Treatment Program (shut down but joined with WTCHP)

5) Friends of Firefighters: (Also in info/referral)

 Friends of Firefighters was born out of necessity after the 9/11 attacks. Offering therapeutic and mental health resources to active and retired firefighters and their families in the days following, we quickly realized this issue would need to be addressed for years to come. Over the past 10 years, Friends of Firefighters has expanded to meet the growing needs of the FDNY community.

6) First Responder Wellness Program- Victims of Violence

 Cambridge Health Alliance (Hospital)

 NOT ACTIVE

7) FDNY Counseling Services Unit

 The FDNY Counseling Service Unit (CSU) staff provide mental health evaluations, direct treatment, and appropriate referrals for all employees, Fire, EMS, and other civilians:

8) World Trade Center Worker and Volunteer Program

 mental health screening for those 9) Survivors Fund Project (DC)

 NVFS was selected in 2001 by The Community Foundation of the National Capital Region to lead the Survivors’ Fund Project, providing direct assistance and long-term case management services to 9/11 victims, their families and first responders.

Displaced persons (homes and Jobs): 23

* JOB TRAINING 1) RACCOON, Inc

- jobs and health insurance for immigrants

Raccoon's Project Nada is included in September 11th Assistance Guide. As the unemployment in the wake of the September 11 tragedy, remains the largest problem, particularly in the shrinking job market, New York City Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs launched Career Counseling program for persons that lost their jobs in the year after September 11, 2001, and are still unemployed or

underemployed. As this situation impacts immigrants more than native-born, and as it particularly affects our consitutency, Raccoon will closely co-operate on this program

2) Family Service League “Career Breakthroughs!”

 Doesn’t specialize in 9/11 but works with Essex County

For more than 130 years, Family Service League has strengthened and supported families in need in Essex County through counseling, education and social services

 Family Service League has a longstanding record of effective response in times of community crisis. Our staff provided trauma therapy to families and co-workers in the aftermath of the shootings at the Montclair Post Office in 1995. We provided free crisis and grief counseling to dozens of families in our area affected by the loss of loved ones following the World Trade Center attacks. Most recently, Family Service League assisted families displaced to Essex County after Hurricane Katrina in

helping to meet their needs and help them relocate to new communities. The staff is prepared and committed to responding immediately and effectively if and when a crisis affects families in our area in the future.

3) Alianza Dominicana, Inc

4) Chinatown Resource Center (NY) community center (community center)

 Helped with case management for people in the Chinatown district

The Chinatown Resource Center works to empower the community and promote community stability by offering case management, referral services and public education programs

5) Family Support Center (Brooklyn Hospital) - offered programs and services for jobs/counceling

- Lutheran HealthCare is a Social Ministry of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

6) Korean Community Services of Metropolitan NY

 also in community services category

7) Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York

 helped displaced workers and families of victims 8) “September Space” World Cares Center

As a registered 501c3 charitable organization, World Cares Center’s mission is to alleviate the pain and suffering inherent in accidents and disasters by empowering individuals, strengthening communities, and training local citizens, agencies, and leaders to prevent, prepare for, and respond to emergency situations

9) Tuesdays Children (previously coded) 10) Good Grief Program Circle (Massachusetts) - previously coded

- trains teachers and school staff how to work with affected individuals 11) NJ Interfaith Partnership for Disaster Recovery (previously coded) 12) Adventures in Teaching and Counseling

American Group Psychotherapy Association

13) Asian American Federation of NY (Job training) - previously coded

14) Asian Professional Extension

 For mental health providers, parents and grandparents

 training people how to handle the situation 15) Care for Caregivers

 Council of Churches of the City of NY

 clergy that served by ground zero

 Lutheran Disaster Response

 for therapists

17) Health and Welfare Council of Long Island

 case managers for 9/11 unmet needs

18) Islamic Circle of N.America (previously coded)

19) New Visions for Public School – 9/11 School Recovery Program

 Guidance councelors in the near by area 20) Project Renewal – Tides Center

 faculty and staff in lower manhattan schools 21) Reaching Children Initiative

 health care professionals offered at School of medicine 22) STAR – NYC

Church world services (clergy and community leaders) 23) Pennsylvania September 11 Programs

 Mental Health professionals

 Network of Victim Assistance in Buck County Survivors and their families: 1

http://www.survivorsnet.org/resources1.html

 this website has lists of all these other programs Mental and Physical Health Services: 16

 Financial Assistance for Mental Health

1) 9/11 Mental Health and Substance Abuse Programs (national)*** also a hotline***

- mental health articles not updated since 10-2011 - information for programs and information of progress - doesn’t explain offering financial aid

2) Ney Jersey Interfaith Partnership for Disaster Rocvery

 now a voluntary organization that helps prepare for future disasters

 latent organization “emergency” (emergent that goes back to latent) The statewide NJ 9/11 Unmet Needs Table was closed on 12/31/2008.

Goals:

1) Identify current and future populations affected by disaster, including:

· Families and Individuals experiencing loss and/or trauma

· Jobless and Underemployed

Dear Friends: At the New Jersey Interfaith Partnership for Disaster Recovery Board of Trustees meeting on July 1, 2009, the decision was made to conclude active operations of the organization.

3) Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics (DC) (National efforts)

 Established in 1987 the Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics, a non-profit organization, is committed to improving the practice of occupational and environmental health through information sharing and collaborative research.

Helps individuals learn about what they can do about occupational mental or physical injuries (offered a lot of support after 9/11)

4) World Trade Center Medical Monitoring Program in New Jersey ****

 offered health screening and treatment for fireman and other effected by 9/11 From September 11, 2001, through fiscal year 2010, approximately $475 million in federal funds was made available for screening, monitoring, and treating WTC responders for illnesses and conditions related to the WTC disaster. These include asthma, persistent coughing, and other respiratory conditions and mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

The three federal programs that provided screening, monitoring, and treatment services to responders prior to July 1, 2011, which we refer to here as the WTC responder health programs, were the New York City Fire Department's (FDNY) WTC Medical Monitoring and Treatment Program

5) Bellevue Hospital World Trade Center Health Treatment Program

The World Trade Center Environmental Health Center is a Center of Excellence that is dedicated to the assessment and treatment of WTC-related conditions. The Center provides health care with no out of pocket costs to residents, students, workers, or passersby who may still be sick from 9/11

http://www.nyc.gov/html/hhc/html/services/wtc-health-center.shtml

http://www.nyc.gov/html/hhc/html/services/wtc-health-center.shtml

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